350 Malay parents and kids to get help in maths

Programme also offers low-income families courses like cooking and encourages bonding

Minister of State for Manpower Zaqy Mohamad (right) with Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Social and Family Development and Education Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim, at a post-National Day Rally dialogue with Malay/Muslim community leaders yesterday.
Minister of State for Manpower Zaqy Mohamad (right) with Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Social and Family Development and Education Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim, at a post-National Day Rally dialogue with Malay/Muslim community leaders yesterday. ST PHOTO: MARK CHEONG

Some 350 Malay parents and children will, by next March, go through a free enhanced version of an educational programme that boosts mathematics skills, encourages creativity and bonds families.

This KelasMateMatika@CC programme (KMM) will build on self-help group Mendaki's existing Tiga M programme. It will be open to all Malay/Muslim families with young children aged between four and six, and whose net household per capita income is $450 or less.

The programme is the first initiative from the M³ collaboration between three key Malay/Muslim organisations: Mendaki, the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis) and the People's Association Malay Activity Executive Committees Council (Mesra). Minister of State for Manpower Zaqy Mohamad, who is the deputy chairman of Mendaki, announced this at a post-National Day Rally dialogue organised by Mesra yesterday.

Speaking on the sidelines of the event at the Singapore Management University School of Law, Mr Zaqy said the Tiga M programme has been successful, and it intended to scale up this success by reaching out to more needy families.

"This is a programme that is able to help families, especially those in the lower income, and help children have a good start in education. We are aiming for pre-schoolers in which we have seen this programme be successful within a smaller base," he said.

Under the Tiga M programme, groups of 25 families - each with a child and at least one parent or family member - go through six weekly sessions that are run by qualified trainers.

Children are exposed to various basic mathematics concepts like numbers, shapes, sorting, while parents learn about teaching approaches that they can use to help their children improve these skills.

In addition to these six sessions, with KMM, parents and children will also go through four weeks of supplementary courses at community centres (CCs) that will expose them to other skills and encourage family bonding.

Each group of 25 families will choose and undergo four out of eight pre-selected courses over the four weeks. The courses include cooking, arts and crafts, performing arts and sports. The first three KMM batches will start on Sept 15 at the CCs in Nee Soon Central, Marsiling and Pasir Ris East.

Organisers said that seven batches of families would have gone through the KMM programme by March next year.

Muis will be carrying out outreach efforts about KMM to needy families that it will identify through its zakat (Muslim tithe) database.

When asked why education was chosen as the first issue to be tackled by M³, Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Social and Family Development and Education Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim, who was at the event yesterday, said it was important that every child in Singapore had a good start in education.

"At the end of the day, you want a Singaporean to have a good start in life and you need to go to where it is critical to ensure this," he said.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on September 05, 2018, with the headline 350 Malay parents and kids to get help in maths. Subscribe